Georgia State: Is Bus Public Transit Access The Key In The Fight For Equitable Cities?

Staff Report From Georgia CEO

Friday, August 17th, 2018

By Chris Wyczalkowski, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies

Can the humble bus be a key weapon in the fight for equitable cities? The experience of Atlanta suggests it could.

There is a positive relationship between increasing the reach of public bus service and the residential location of low-income populations, leading to a more equitable city. In our research, my colleagues and I found strong evidence the expansion of public bus transit in Atlanta led to an increased percentage of low-income residents. This suggests bus transit in both urban and suburban areas can increase residential opportunities for the poor and improve their access to much-needed resources and services.

Poverty is no longer a central-city phenomenon. In the United States more poor people now live in the suburbs than in the central cities. Several factors have contributed to the suburban population shift and metropolitan expansion, chief among them the expansion of the road and highway network.

Public transportation, although often struggling to keep pace, has also strived to provide accessibility within the expanding urban boundaries. But notably, with the long time horizon needed to plan and fund a rail system and its dependence on high population density to provide sufficient ridership, suburban service is mostly provided through bus transit. Given the reliance of low-income populations on public transportation, low-income riders, particularly in the suburbs, are a bus system’s primary clientele.

The Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority was created in 1972, primarily to ease automobile traffic congestion and provide lower-cost commuting. Immediately after its formation, MARTA purchased Atlanta’s only surviving bus system and began working on an intra-urban rail transit system.

By the mid-1980s, the Atlanta region had a functional mass transit system composed of a heavy rail system in the city center and bus service that reached into the suburbs. In the 1990s, the demolition of public housing projects in the city forced affordable housing opportunities to the suburbs and MARTA to expand its bus services, making these neighborhoods more accessible.

If public transportation is one of the key factors that concentrates poor households in the central city, could this also be true for the suburbs as transit expands outside the city center? If so, the expansion of bus transit may provide an easily implementable and cost-effective policy to address the challenge of access to low-income housing.

Along with fellow Georgia State doctoral alumni, Rahul Pathak and Xi Huang (now at the City University of New York and the University of Central Florida, respectively) we tracked the evolution of bus service coverage in the Atlanta metropolitan area in tandem with poverty changes over time. We find the neighborhoods adjacent to bus public transportation consistently have higher proportions of poor residents, as defined by the federal government’s poverty threshold (click here for the most recent definition listed by  household size from the Department of Health and Human Services).

The maps below illustrate this expansion, depicting poverty (red) and public bus transit coverage (crosshatch). The overlap of the transit footprint with poverty remains as we statistically account for other factors that may influence the location of poor households, such as median rent, home values, population density and housing stock.

Click here to view the maps.

Extent of public transit access via bus service in the metropolitan Atlanta area versus federal poverty rate, 1970 versus 2010. Bus transit can be a key weapon in the fight for equitable cities.

We found bus transit-accessible neighborhoods, in general, have larger shares of poor residents over time. Therefore, expanding access to public bus transportation may open new housing opportunities, access to schools, healthcare and public services, providing the missing link in fostering equitable urban development for low-income populations.

Click here to access a copy of the study. If you cannot view the study, please contact Jeremy Craig at [email protected] or Jennifer Giarratano at [email protected].